The role of Dubai as a global finance hub and favored landing spot for the global elite faces its first big test in the Iran ...
Many of Asia’s richest families are reconsidering their exposure to Dubai as the Iran war rattles the city that has attracted billions from across the region in recent years.
While the ultra-rich are finding their expensive way out of Dubai, hundreds of thousands of others have not been as lucky as ...
Soon after ​the first Iranian missile and drone attacks on Dubai last week, two Indian entrepreneurs based there tried to ...
Tens of thousands of residents and tourists have left UAE since the US and Israel started bombing Iran two weeks ago, leaving beach bars, malls and hotels eerily empty ...
Dubai’s rise as a finance and wealth hub faces a test as the Iran war draws closer. Wealthy Asian families are delaying relocations and weighing cuts to investments once seen as safe in the Gulf.
Dubai's ultra-wealthy are repurposing their fortified panic rooms, originally built to guard against kidnapping and theft, as ...
Dubai's super-rich have started fleeing the glitzy business hub by any means necessary, paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to escape a regional war they fear has no end in sight.
The super wealthy are paying up to $350,000 to escape the region on private jets, while others are willing to drive 10 hours to Saudi Arabia to charter planes to Europe.
Lee hsien loong, Singapore’s Senior Minister, recently gave some advice to foreigners in the city-state: “Please keep the bling down.” Mr Lee counselled migrants not to go popping expensive champagne ...
Private jets are up to 14 times more polluting than commercial planes – and are now being used to escape escalating conflict in the Middle East. View on euronews ...